The present invention relates to arrangements for transporting powders and in particular to powder hoppers.
When distributing powdered material through a hopper the generation of “rat holes” is a well known effect. Starting from the assumption that a bulk of powdered material has a flow direction through the hopper, which generally is the case, rat holes may be defined as cavities formed when an upstream portion of the bulk does not follow the movement of a downstream portion of the bulk. The likelihood of these cavities being formed will be affected by properties of the powdered material, properties of the hopper, as well as processing properties, such as mean velocity of the bulk.
Such cavities may result in various drawbacks. One example is that unless the cavity collapses the flow of powdered material will stop into downstream processes, which is readily understood as being a drawback. Furthermore, as a cavity collapses a pressure wave may be generated and disturb dosing equipment arranged further downstream. Also, the formed cavity may entrain air into the bulk, which may affect a resulting downstream product, for example if the powder is subsequently mixed into a liquid to form a food product.
Thus, there is a desire in eliminating rat holes even before they appear.
Though hopper was mentioned as an example in the above, the same problem may occur as when removing powder from a powder silo, a big-bag emptying station etc. and the applicability of the present invention is therefore not limited to hoppers only.
The problem as such is not new, rather several solutions have been presented over the years. To mention a few examples air may be injected into the powder bulk, and there may be an agitation of the bulk. The present invention aims at providing an improved arrangement for avoiding the occurrence of rat holes.
To that end the present invention relates to an arrangement for transporting powder comprising a hopper arranged on a stand, the hopper having an inlet for receiving powder and an outlet for dispensing powder, wherein a vibrator is attached to the hopper and wherein the hopper is suspended to the stand via spring means cancelling out propagation of vibrations generated by the vibrator. The arrangement is particularly configured to prevent the occurrence of ‘rat holes’, cavities, generated in a mass of powder being transported through the hopper.
In one or more embodiments the outlet comprises a resilient arrangement configured to prevent vibrations from propagating away from the outlet. This resilient arrangement may in one or several embodiments be selected from the group comprising: a flexible hose piece (e.g. an length of hose made from a resilient material such as an elastomer or from a metal bellow hose piece) incorporated in the downstream outlet pipe and an integrated flexible part of the powder hopper (e.g. an elastomer or metal bellow part or combinations thereof. Some specific examples will be given in relation to the detailed description of embodiments.
A bluff body may in one or more embodiments be arranged inside the hopper, and this bluff body may be configured to vibrate, either by comprising a separate bluff-body vibrator or by being suspended to the hopper via springs, or a combination thereof.
A vibrator 104 is connected to the hopper 102 such that activation of the vibrator 104 may be used to induce a vibration to the hopper 102 and thereby to the powder contained therein. The vibrator may preferable be electrically or pneumatically powered and of a rotating mass imbalance type or reciprocating mass hammer type and it may be mounted rigidly on the hopper cone. It is not the purpose of the present invention to state exact frequency intervals for various installations, yet typical vibration frequencies may range from 15 to 60 Hz. The rotational imbalance and motor power of the vibrator is selected according to the weight of the powder filled hopper while the hopper suspension springs may be designed to obtain an eigenfrequency of the entire system (hopper, spring, powder) equal or close to the vibrator excitation frequency, or vice versa to further enhance the effect.
The hopper is arranged on a stand or other framework (not shown in
In the lower portion of the hopper 102 an outlet 108 is arranged. There is also a resilient arrangement 109 preventing propagation of vibrations via the outlet 108. This may be solved by using a flexible conduit. A flexible conduit may consist of a conduit which is flexible in a longitudinal direction thereof, e.g. a spirally wound flexible pipe, a non-tensioned tube made from fabric or cloth material, a bellow tube etc. yet it also may be a hose or pipe which is rigid in a longitudinal direction thereof yet where a sufficient length is provided for the end fastened to the outlet 108 to be allowed to move freely without inducing a movement of the second end of the hose or pipe. A generalization of the above examples may be that the outlet 108 should comprise a resilient arrangement 109 configured to prevent propagation of vibrations away from the outlet.
The hopper 102 may also comprise a level sensor 110 controlling the level of powder in the hopper 102.
Consequently the vibrator 104 is used to excite the complete hopper 102 which is mounted on springs 106 and isolated from the surroundings through the outlet pipe 108 via a flexible membrane (or a flexible hose) 109. The vibrating hopper 102 allows for a silent operation while the vibration of the hopper is sufficient to avoid rat holes in most powders.
they are arranged in an opposing relationship in the present setup at a certain axial position (corresponding to a height in the view of
The springs 214 may be arranged at a slight upward angle, and in the present and more embodiments they extend perpendicularly from the interior surface of the hopper 202 towards a central axis of rotational symmetry thereof (this would correspond to ‘orthogonally’ if the surface was planar and ‘in the direction of the normal’ if the surface was curved). In other embodiments the springs may be arranged at another angle.
A characteristic feature of the bluff-body arrangement (the bluff body 212 and its suspension 214) is that it has an eigenfrequency similar or identical to the vibration frequency of the spring suspended hopper excitated by the vibrator 204. This means that as the vibrator 204 induces a vibration of the hopper 202 this vibration will propagate to the bluff-body arrangement and cause the bluff body 212 to vibrate, and in more general terms the eigenfrequency of the bluff-body arrangement is said to correspond to the vibration frequency of the spring suspended hopper exited by the vibrator 204. In this way the powder will be affected by vibrations from the hopper 202 as well as from the bluff body 212, from the outside as well as from the inside, and emerging rat holes will have an even lesser chance of prevailing. When the bluff body is covered with a certain layer of powder the transmitted energy from the vibrator is almost entirely used to vibrate the complete hopper system since the vibration of the bluff body is dampened by the surrounding powder. However when the bluff body is exposed—e.g. by an emerging rat hole—the transmitted energy from the vibrator is partly used to vibrate the bluff body back and forth.
The springs 214 may e.g. be linear springs or compression springs (coil springs) or tensional springs, or any other springs allowing for the adequate behaviour of the bluff body.
Another unexpected effect of the bluff body 212 is that it may also act to reduce the compression pressure on the powder portion residing in lower part of the hopper downstream of the bluff body. The compression pressure that arise due to the weight of the upstream powder bulk may compact the powder in a way that prevent desired powder transport through the hopper outlet, and by reducing the pressure the bluff body facilitates a flow of powder.
Attachment bolts 220 are also shown in the view of
In the cross section of
In the embodiment of
The foregoing description is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit embodiments of the present invention to the precise form disclosed, and modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings or may be acquired from practice of various embodiments of the present invention. The embodiments discussed herein were chosen and described in order to explain the principles and the nature of various embodiments of the present invention and its practical application to enable one skilled in the art to utilize the present invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. The features of the embodiments described herein may be combined in all possible combinations of methods, apparatus, modules, and systems.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1351094 | Sep 2013 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2014/070026 | 9/19/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2015/040174 | 3/26/2015 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160214790 A1 | Jul 2016 | US |